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7 health insurance myths debunked © Adam Gault / Digital Vision / Getty Images

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7 health insurance myths debunked

Think that insurers are what make coverage so expensive? Think Canadians have it better or that your company's plan is the cheapest for you? Think again.

By Insure.com

Hearsay and bad information often fuel people's misunderstandings of health insurance. When was the last time someone snuggled up with a cup of coffee and her insurance policy?

According to the Life and Health Insurance Foundation for Education and the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, the following myths are alive and well in the minds of most folks.

1. It's cheapest to buy health insurance through an employer's group plan.

If your employer offers a group health plan, you're likely experiencing annual increases in premiums, reductions in what's paid for by your employer, increases in your out-of-pocket expenses and the possibility that you're paying for lots of benefits you don't want or need.

An individual health plan (the kind you buy on your own), especially for someone who's healthy and young, can offer significant savings. Unlike individual plans, group health plans must abide by state health insurance mandates, which can require coverage for everything from autism to hearing aids and from contraceptives to in vitro fertilization.

Although an individual health plan can deny your application based on your health status, Matt Tassey, a spokesman for LIFE, notes that if you're eligible the plan can be customized to meet your specific health care needs.

"If you're a man, you have no need to see an obstetrician. But if they have an employer-sponsored health plan, they are still paying for (the obstetrics coverage)," he says.

2. Health insurance is expensive because health insurance companies are driven by profit.

Brenda Weigel, a spokeswoman for the National Association of Health Underwriters, says this is a common misconception. "The fact that health insurance is expensive is because health care is expensive. Or there's the common misconception that Medicare administrative costs are lower than private plans, when in fact there is quite a bit of cost-shifting," says Weigel.

When patients use a government insurance program (such as Medicare), providers of health care shift more costs to people who have insurance. The result is higher premiums for people who purchase their insurance on the individual market and workers who receive insurance through their employers.

Tassey notes that rising prescription drug costs also fuel increases.

3. If you're young and healthy you don't need to pay for health insurance.

Then what happens when you break your leg in a snowboarding accident or blow out your knee while playing soccer? If you find that your tonsils need to be removed, the cost of a tonsillectomy can start at $5,000, with an additional $1,500 per day for an overnight hospital stay.

"There is this idea that if they need to be hospitalized they can just go to the emergency room because they have to take you," says Tassey. "We like to call them 'young immortals.' A problem arises when they have to be stabilized or, worse, have to stay in the hospital for an extended period of time. What happens if they have to be transferred somewhere else for care or have to see a specialist? The cost could reach $100,000 once you add everything up, and starting out their lives in serious medical debt can have a long-term repercussions on their financial future."

Tassey says young people rarely think about health insurance until it's time to have a baby.

4. The highest numbers of uninsured people are under age 25.

The fastest-growing group of uninsured Americans is age 50 to 64. The difference between the younger and older people is accessibility to health insurance. While younger people who are not covered by an employer's health plan may find it easy to acquire affordable individual coverage on their own because of age and health status, older people do not have the same advantage.

According to recent estimates from the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, middle-aged and older adults under age 65 (and not yet eligible for Medicare) are fast becoming the largest group of Americans without health insurance.

In fact, 19 million Americans from age 50 to 64 were uninsured or underinsured in 2008. Members of this group are more likely to arrive at a doctor's office with a number of chronic medical conditions, making it difficult or impossible for them to buy individual health insurance. As baby boomers reach age 65, the sheer number of people in need of coverage has the potential of overwhelming the Medicare system.

"This is a serious problem as the baby boomers age and the cost of health care skyrockets. If you drive an old car, you have to do repairs to keep that car moving. Just imagine having 75 million old cars coming into the Medicare system -- that is exactly what we are looking at in the next several years," says Tassey.

Continued: Your COBRA options

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Saturday, August 08, 2009 8:50:42 AM
It's good to hear the story from the insurance company perspective.  No wonder they are spending millions a day to lobby for the failure of National Healthcare and won't even let the politicians hear about a single payer system.  The biggest problem is years ago they made healthcare a for profit system and now it is big business with high paid CEO's .  Instead of making it an effective and efficient system at minimum cost they have invented ways to market  that increase demand for unnecessary drugs and procedures through advertisement.  The system in the USA is twice as expensive as any other industrialized nation and the system is not as good as most European countries have.  There are more malpractice suits in the USA and that drives costs up more.  You seldom hear about malpractice in France or England. If our "Free Market" system was so good it would cost less and be more effective and efficient than any other system in the world and no person would go without healthcare. Also the industry would spend their millions on research for better products instead of  buying politicians and TV ad's
Saturday, August 08, 2009 9:37:09 AM
A very, very, very, GOOD point ! 
Saturday, August 08, 2009 3:29:45 PM
IKNOWWHAT.....  is right on target. I worked in health care for 7 years (non clinical ) and i witnessed the greed totally motivated by profit. The Physicans, Drug companies and CEO's of Heatlh Care do not want a single payer system. One independent research study (2008) reports the U.S. has the most expensive health care in the world yet it ranked 37th in the world for quality, access, positive outcomes etc. . You kinda get the picture that heath care in the U.S. and the Wall Street criminals are one of the same. Imagine health care for everyone .
Sunday, August 09, 2009 9:54:05 PM

Reason Number 2, "When patients use a government insurance program (such as Medicare), providers of health care shift more costs to people who have insurance. The result is higher premiums for people who purchase their insurance on the individual market and workers who receive insurance through their employers."

 

This is the definition of being driven by profit.  They have to make up for money by passing along the cost.  So they can remain profitable.  What do the lives and practices of people who don't use the health insurers have to do with the people who do?

Monday, August 10, 2009 5:34:28 AM
PROFIT,  without it what would drive the pharm. companys to make new drugs? Why even be in buisness at that point? there are plenty of other areas in which to make money. Why is it all the big pharm. Companys are in the US and not Canada, France, the UK? because there is no money to be made there. Wake up peaple!!
Monday, August 10, 2009 6:20:40 AM

Good grief guys. Everything is profit driven. Stop and think a little bit. Doctors and nurses don't work for free. Hospitals, medical equipment manufacturers, insurers don't either. And neither do you! Chronic complainers always want someone else to service them for free or for minimum wage. There will always be people who have talents and abilities that will require a hefty fee if you choose to use them. It's not like you are paying for the air you breathe. Here's a tip: Don't use their services if you want the cost to be lower. Very simple. There is no law stating that life is fair. You just live it as it comes.

 

This story points out some valid myths.

Monday, August 10, 2009 6:57:09 AM

I  administer a self-funded plan, and we're able to provide coverage at an average of 1/3 cheaper than these Insurance racketeers.

 

 

Monday, August 10, 2009 7:19:02 AM

Reading your policy isn't what this article is about.  The "myths" being "debunked" have nothing to do with what the policy provides.  The article itself spreads its own disinformation and presents an insurance industry viewpoint and much of it borders of being silly.

 

Sure, group plans may not be the cheapist, but only if you are young, have no dependents, are healthy and pregnancy isn't an issue.  Of course, that group tends not to have insurance unless it is through their employer.  Pointing out that the under 25 crowd is not immortal and can be injured and need hospital care and a way to pay for it is hardly "myth" busting.  Nor is it any surprise that the largest growing group without insurance is the 50-65 year olds.  They are getting laid off, fired, and find themselves without jobs, or if they still have jobs and need healthcare insurance because their employers don't provide it, it will be this group that cannot afford private insurance because they do have medical issues and aren't the spry spring chickens that the under 25 age group is.

 

But the piece of misinformation that made me howl the loudest was the "myth" that insurance companies aren't driven by profit.  What a pile of horse manure.  Sure, medical costs are high, but the insurance industry vigorously protects its profits, often to the point of being absurd.  Not so long ago our insurer declined to pay for general anesthesia for pulling four impacted wisdom teeth on our teenage daughter, claiming that the anesthesia was not medically necessary.  I'll gladly pull every tooth of that bean counter for free if I could do it without using anesthesia, and I could  use the pliers and tools use to do car repairs as sanitary tools aren't medically necessary either.     

Monday, August 10, 2009 7:44:52 AM

Lets not forget that the US medical industry subsidizes the rest of the world in medical and drug research.  We spend more in these areas than any other country and those companies need profit in return.  Without our private system the whole world suffers.

#10
Monday, August 10, 2009 8:42:38 AM
This "article" is nothing more than an advertisement for the insurance industry.  If web entities like MSN ever aspire to be recognized as bone fide news sources they have to practice even-handed journalistic ethics.   Presenting advertising drivel and half-truths, as this story does, only lowers the validity of their journalistic credentials.
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